News of the World: An obituary



News of the World: An obituary



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The closure of the News of the World brings to an end more than 160 years of history.

The Sunday tabloid was first published on 1 October 1843 in London - but this Sunday will see the last edition hit the newsstands. Its closure comes amid a major scandal over phone-hacking and alleged payments to police officers.

Owned by News Group Newspapers, part of News International, which is in turn a subsidiary of Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation, the News of the World's sales currently average 2,812,005 copies per week. Its owners claim that it is read by more people than any other English-language newspaper.

James Murdoch, deputy chief operating officer of News Corporation, and chairman of News International, said the paper had "enjoyed support from Britain's largest advertisers" and "has a proud history of fighting crime, exposing wrong-doing and regularly setting the news agenda for the nation".

Private lives

But it has not been without critics throughout its history. Coverage of many sex scandals, often of the rich and famous, earned it the soubriquet of "News of the Screws" in the satirical magazine Private Eye.

And this interest in private lives goes back decades.

"It was a very important part of British newspaper history. In the 19th Century it was one of the highest circulation papers catering for the newly semi-literate population," says Chris Horrie, tabloid newspaper historian and co-author of Stick it up your Punter: The Uncut Story of the Sun Newspaper.

"In the 20th Century - until [Rupert] Murdoch bought it - it was a strange sideshow in British life, very similar to the saucy seaside postcard. It was full of dirty vicars. There was a specific loophole in libel law that didn't allow vicars to sue."

Murdoch's purchase changed things dramatically.

"Murdoch bought it and completely transformed it. He turned it into a very modern practitioner of chequebook journalism," says Horrie.

"The news happened during the week and wasn't exclusive. But the News of the World would buy up all the stories about celebrities and politicians and pile them up on a Sunday. It was 1980s chequebook journalism."

In both prominence and circulation, the News of the World was king of the Sunday tabloids.

"The paper became completely dominant on Sundays," Horrie notes.

"The Mirror group's Sunday Mirror and People were completely destroyed. So on Sunday Murdoch had these two enormous things - the Sunday Times and the News of the World. The Mail group were the only significant competition."

In 2000, the paper began a controversial campaign to "name and shame" alleged paedophiles, following the abduction and murder of eight-year-old Sarah Payne.

The paper has also campaigned for the introduction of "Sarah's Law" to allow public access to the Sex Offenders Register.

The newspaper's report that Formula 1 chief Max Mosley had paid five women to take part in a sado-masochistic orgy prompted a major legal battle over privacy.

The High Court ruled in July 2008 that the News of the World had breached Mosley's privacy. He was awarded £60,000 in damages.

Arguably the most famous journalist on the paper in recent years was undercover specialist Mazher Mahmood. His exposes - often carried out using his disguise as the "Fake Sheikh" - targeted everyone from the Countess of Wessex to former England manager Sven-Goran Eriksson. The News of the World also claims he has brought about the conviction of more than 250 criminals.

In August 2010, posing once again as the "Fake Sheikh" he exposed a group of Pakistani cricketers, accused of corruption.

Hacking accusations

But the tide began to turn against the paper in January 2007, when its royal editor Clive Goodman and private investigator Glenn Mulcaire were jailed for hacking, after it was found they targeted Prince William's aides.

This set off a chain of events which has led to accusations of phone hacking of the families of murder victims, and of the relatives of UK soldiers killed in action.

Announcing the paper's closure, James Murdoch has said the paper "is in the business of holding others to account. But it failed when it came to itself".

Paul McMullan is the former News of the World deputy features editor who helped blow the whistle on phone hacking practices at the paper.

"It's the end of the biggest-selling English language newspaper in the world - the end of 170 years of history," he says.

"It was a great part of my career, but I was joyful when I heard the news.

"Ten years ago I was proud to say I worked at the News of the World. Last week I was ashamed."

Now, it seems the Sun will be published on a Sunday to fill the gap, but there will be a question mark over who will inherit the News of the World's audience.

"Newspaper readers are pretty disloyal," says Horrie.

VOCABULARY

Match meanings with these words from the passage:

1. tabloid smaller company controlled by a larger one 3

2. scandal an aspect of a law or rule that allows people to

escape punishment 9

3. subsidiary being highly visible and important 12

4. coverage a lot of people having sex together 15

5. soubriquet an Anglican (聖公會) pastor 8

6. screw Arab king or prince 17

7. satirical involving giving or receiving pain to get sexual pleasure 14

8. vicar working secretly 16

9. loophole having sex (noun and verb – slang) 6

10. libel someone who has sex with children 13

11.exclusive. stop wrongdoing by making it public 19

12. prominence giving information about a subject 4

13. paedophile nickname 5

14. sado-masochistic damage to reputation, public disgrace 2

15. orgy small-size newspaper aimed intended for people who are not very well educated 1

16. undercover the crime of making untrue statements about someone that damage their reputation10

17. sheikh deciding in court that someone is guilty of a crime 18

18. conviction not available to others 11

19. blow the whistle making fun of people for a political or moral purpose 7

QUESTIONS

1. Look at the picture of an issue of the paper published last century. Can you work out which year?

It must be 1917. This was the only year when the Americans made a formal declaration of war at a time when the French were still in the fighting. When America entered WWII in 1941 France was under German occupation.

2. Explain the meaning of these phrases:

hit the newsstands arrive at the places where newspapers are sold, reach

setting the news agenda setting the targets and the subjects which other newspapers then also have to cover

chequebook journalism paying people large amounts of money to get news stories from or about them

3, What activities by Hong Kong newspapers have received criticism. What do you think newspapers should and should not do?

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